Ventriloquist Cat (1950) Poster

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6/10
Natural Born Sadists like Tom and Jerry
mrdonleone8 May 2008
When I began watching this cartoon, I was prepared for the worst, but it really seemed to be a good cartoon. But after a while, it has multiple faults. The basic theme is original, but after a while it was obvious the cartoonists only tried to form a new couple of natural born sadists like Tom and Jerry. Off course they failed doing so. Tom and Jerry are cult, this stupid dog and cat couldn't be as funny as worlds most loved cat and mouse team. In less than one minute, I believe I saw five explosions. Imagine if the kids of today would think killing somebody is funny! No, I really dislike this demonic cartoon. But I can't stop human evolution, so I guess it's too late to stop it now.
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6/10
If YOU have noticed that the "Ace Costume Company" featured in . . .
oscaralbert16 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . VENTRILOQUIST CAT is a plagiarized, emasculated version (that is, the letter "M" has been lopped off) of the famed "Acme" network of affiliated firms referred to more than 3,000 times in Classic Looney Tunes, you're probably a card-carrying Tune-Head. Therefore, you'll already be well aware that VENTRILOQUIST CAT is a product of its director "Tex Ovary's" twilight years, after he'd been defrocked by the always eponymous Warner Bros.' division of Prophetic Prognosticators (aka, The Looney Tuners) and permanently exiled from "Termite Terrace." (Most self-respecting dudes facing similar situations have soon played "rope-a-dope" with a barn rafter, but Mr. Ovary chose to go slumming at the mendacious greedy misers' club instead; hence VENTRILOQUIST CAT.) There is little if anything to recommend this waste of cartoon cells, other than the fact that most of Mr. Ovary's post-Warner output is far worse.
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7/10
Maybe I should have down-rated this font of . . .
pixrox18 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . misinformation even more, as it is likely if not certain to mislead uninformed viewers about the Art of Ventriloquism. At total odds with the Truth, VENTRILOQUIST CAT's Sylvester clone runs across a bogus device in a dumpster allowing him to throw his meows eight times the distance that the most proficient human practitioners of this science are able to manage. The first problem with this scenario is that no one would consign such a wonder to a landfill IF it existed. That would be akin to trashing Aladdin's lamp before making a second wish. Further destroying the credibility of this story, it concludes with the counterfeit cat doing this exact same thoughtless action simply for the sake of allowing the lazy filmmakers to have some sort of image for their final title card. Perhaps it would be better to consign this film to the dust bin of Cinema History's "Fives."
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10/10
Tex Avery rules!!
wbhickok3 July 2001
Tex Avery made many classic cartoons, but this may very well be his very best, as the title implies, it concerns a ventriloquist cat with nothing better to do than make a dogs life miserable. Non-stop laughs from beginning to end.
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10/10
Meow Wow!
Squonk4 January 1999
One of Tex Avery's best! A cat uses a device to throw his voice, thus leading a dog into many painful situations. Each gag is fresh and funny. Features the best scene of a dog dressing as a cat I've seen in a cartoon. The twist ending is hilarious. A classic!
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10/10
Vintage Tex Avery and therefore hilarious!
llltdesq21 December 2000
Tex Avery was a genius at the art of the animated short. He did for the animated short what Walt Disney did for the feature. Avery seemed to have something of a fondness for black cats, as he did a number of cartoons featuring black cats. Ventriloquist Cat was one of them. Mostly sight-gags fired at the viewer at a very frenetic pace and designed to keep you rolling around on the floor laughing. More often than not, it works. This and most of Avery's shorts are marvelously (sometimes wickedly) funny. Most highly recommended.
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Classic Avery Short
Michael_Elliott23 July 2010
Ventriloquist Cat (1950)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Classic Avery cartoon about a cat who becomes a ventriloquist so that he can play a bunch of tricks on a rather dumb bulldog. The premise to this short is a very, very simple one but it works perfectly as it gets one incredibly big laugh after another. One could argue that the same thing keeps happening over and over but that doesn't really matter when you're getting a laugh with the joke. There are countless highlights here including a terrific sequence where the cat makes the bulldog think he's hiding in some clothes, which the dog starts to rip up and he finally makes it to a real police officer and rips his clothes off. Another great scene is the end when the cat thinks it's safe to take the special piece he's been using out of his mouth but the final shot is pure classic. The majority of the jokes come from various explosions where the bulldog is the victim but they're all funny.
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10/10
Tex always hilarious and this time he pioneered SOUND "sampling"
maymad20 February 2020
Another hilarious Tex Avery cartoon with breakneck pace and always with a new twist on old gags! This short from 1950 predates ANY other use of "Sound sampling" which became a norm in the 80's with the advent of electronic samplers, especially for Rap. (Sound sampling is where you take a snippet of a musical or voice recording and repeat it several times, therefore using the original sound instead of having the performer repeat it). I could not imagine how either Tex or the sound engineer came up with the idea nor how it was performed cause this was recorded to magnetic 35 mm film stock, so I guess they PRERECORDED and dubbed(and spliced) the "MEOW MEOW!" to another sound reel and synchronized its playback when the orchestra and cast did the soundtrack (sound was always recorded BEFORE the cartoon was done)... He repeated this experiment in "Billy Boy" a few years later, except that then it was with SEVERAL samples from Daws Butler's voice... These early Hollywood pioneers are all but forgotten but they paved the way to all things modern... "MEOW, MEOW!!!.. MEOW, MEOW!!!"
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9/10
It's Tex Avery...and it's great!
planktonrules15 August 2012
Tex Avery's MGM cartoons are among the very best ever made--and if you haven't seen them, you are in for a treat if you see one. While "Ventriloquist Cat" may not be his very best, it's sure close. And, if after seeing it you STILL don't like his films, then there is no hope for you!

The cartoon begins with a nasty cat doing 'I hate dogs' graffiti everywhere...including on a dog's stomach! The dog is not amused and spends the rest of the film chasing the cat. But the cat is VERY resourceful and uses a trick device to throw his voice--sending the dog on a wild chase all over town trying to find that darned cat. This isn't all, but I won't say more--it would spoil the crazy fun.

While the animation is great, the film is wonderful because it's funny...very funny. And, wildly creative--a characteristic of Avery's fine MGM films. By the way, I mention his MGM films because, oddly, Avery's films he did prior to this were for Looney Tunes--and they were much, much more conventional. Not terrible, but not nearly as much fun as his later films, that's for sure.
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8/10
I Liked The Duck
boblipton7 January 2023
A cat uses ventriloquism to torment a dog. Plus dynamite.

The structure is the usual one for a Tex Avery cartoon: one gag after another, until the length of the cartoon is used up.... although there is an ending that's a bit different in tone from the rest. Here, as always, Avery's gags are beautifully composed and executed, with a little fillip at the end of each to induce a further giggle, that makes him one of the great cartoon directors at Termite Terrace at the start of the 1940s, each with their own style. Alas, Avery's theatrical cartoon career would last only another eight years, before the declining economics of the industry drove him to the ad business... where he would prosper, as befitted his genius.
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10/10
The animated art of ventriloquism
TheLittleSongbird21 October 2017
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best he ever did. 'Ventriloquist Cat' is another example of an animated masterpiece and one of his all time best. Like the best of Tex Avery, 'Ventriloquist Cat' is a cartoon of amazing quality, is very creative and hilarious as one would expect from Avery on top form like he is here. Even when he wasn't at his best, he still delivered, have yet to see a "bad" effort from him.

Both the cat and dog characters have terrific comic timing and are interesting, likable characters. The cat is crafty and the bulldog getting the worst of the violence. The voice work can't be faulted.

Avery does a wonderful job directing, with his unique, unlike-any-other visual and characteristic and incredibly distinctive wacky humour style all over it as can be expected.

Once again there is nothing sadistic or repetitious, instead it's imaginative, wonderfully wild and hilarious throughout from start to finish. The sight gags throughout are an absolute joy and are immaculate in timing, the ending is both surprising and hysterical.

It is no surprise either that the animation is superb, being rich in colour and detail. The character designs are unique, Avery always did have creative character designs, and suitably fluid. The music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed.

Summing up, another Avery masterpiece. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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9/10
classic
SnoopyStyle7 January 2023
Alley Cat is writing "I hate Dogs!" on the fences. Spike spots him and chases him away. He finds a box labeled "be a Ventriloquist!!". He uses the device to throw his voice and prank Spike. This is a classic Tex Avery MGM Cartoon. Beside all the fun pranks, there is a weird comedic rhythm with the "Meow, Meow". It's a great Spike cartoon. The concept is so simple and so effective. As a kid, I actually thought that that's how real ventriloquists do their voices. It's an invented interesting writing device coming from Tex which fixes so many issues. All in all, it doesn't get much better than this.
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